Last week I was blessed with the opportunity to participate with Green Halloween at the Whole Foods, Bellevue store to promote a healthier and eek-o friendly Halloween for our children!! I took fall pictures of kids as they visited the store. The produce department offers pretty amazing fall color with all the fruits and vegetables. (It was POURING rain that day so the original plan to be outside with the pumpkins didn’t work out). I also provided a fun eco-friendly pirate themed craft for the kids. We made these out of leather upholstery samples all repurposed for a craft!! I have to say that it took a little thought to figure out what to make out of little 4×6 pieces of leather and Corey from Green Halloween gave me the perfect idea of Pirate Eye Patches, and then I added in Pirate Bracelets and little Treasure Pouches too!

Check out Corey and Lynn from Green Halloween hard at work! And I love seeing the photography I did blown up huge on their banners! Look at that cutie!!

What is Green Halloween? Be sure to check out their website for tips on being green, offering healthy alternatives for our children, and products safe for the enviroment at www.greenhalloween.org.

Have aneighborhood party and forgo trick-or-treating all together. Ask your child’s school to consider making their Halloween celebration green as well.

Have a charity-themed party. Instead of giving out prizes for games, allow children to pick from a list of charities and make a donation in their name.

Have a Halloween gratitude party. Deliver handmade cards to your local farmer and take a tour of his/her field. Arrange before hand for each child to bring a mini pumpkin home.

Talk to your neighbors about what they will be giving away in advance. One option is to trick-or-treat only at homes where you know Green Halloween items will be passed out.

Show your Green by displaying your own Green Halloween sign and ask your Green Halloween neighbors to do the same. Turn looking for the signs into a hunt for treasures. The Green Halloween sign on your own door will announce to trick-or-treaters that they’re in for a great surprise!

Give kids a full, healthy meal before they go out trick-or-treating so they are not hungry.

Talk to your kids about what is in candy and why it is not healthy. Ask them to come up with creative, kid and Earth-friendly alternatives that your own family can hand out and feel good about.

Invite the Halloween Fairy to come to your home. Tell you child a story, or use our book to talk about how the Halloween fairy turns candy into magic fairy dust and so needs as much candy as she can get her hands on. Explain that if a child leaves his bag of candy outside on the porch, the fairy will gladly come to take the candy, and because she will be so grateful for the help with her fairy-dust-making, she’ll leave in the candy’s place a very special gift. Some parents make the exchange while their child is brushing their teeth, others wait until their child is asleep. Either way, make a big deal of it! Act surprised! You may also want to consider letting your child keep a small amount of candy and leaving the rest out for the fairy. Please don’t donate your leftover sweets to charity, though. Other people’s kids don’t need the candy either.

Have a candy trade: let your kids trade their candy towards other little gifts or give them a “pumpkin point” for each piece of candy they collect. Use pumpkin points to “buy” a toy or do a special activity with your child.

Let them choose a limited amount of candy to eat (for example, one piece for each year your child is old). In many cities, the leftover candy can be recycled and turned into compost! Just be sure to remove candy from its wrapper first.

As always, Holli, you did a super superior job at this event. The patches were so cute and your photos are simply outstanding. I’m sure the parents were ecstatic! Thanks so much for participating with us.